Inadmissible Evidence

Bill Maitland, a middle aged lawyer, struggles to avoid the harsh truths
of his life. As those closest to him draw away, he puts himself on
trial to fight for his sanity. John Osborne's poignant, witty and
compelling portrait of loss, betrayal and defeat releases the author's
characteristic display of soaring rhetorical venom to powerful effect.

Here is a man dissected, a man revealed, a man at war with his conscience, his soul, his standards, or lack of them, yet he reaches out desperately for life. A critic summed up with, "It strikes like lightning."

First performed at the Royal Court Theatre in 1964, Inadmissible
Evidence received a major revival at the Donmar Warehouse, London, in
October 2011.

'This is a work of stunning and intemperate power, a great bellow of
rage and pain... there is a self-lacerating honesty about his writing
that few other playwrights have come close to matching.' Daily Telegraph